Temple's proposed causal mechanism ·CM seeds in fruit adapted to dodo
Dodos ate CM fruits. Seeds in fruit became thick to withstand passing through dodos' stomachs. But seeds were so thick they couldn't germinate without passing through dodos' stomachs. When dodos went extinct, seeds couldn't germinate.
In this Purpose in Context question, we are asked for the author’s purpose in saying that Temple’s findings lent his argument a semblance of rigor. Remember that “semblance” means the appearance of having some quality, even when that may not be the case. For this question, we are looking for an answer that says that Temple’s argument seemed rigorous, even if that wasn’t actually true.
The problem that the author has with Temple isn’t that his methods were not carefully derived––we don’t know what the author thinks about this. Because (A) does not accurately capture the author’s perspective, (A) doesn’t describe the author’s purpose in using the phrase “semblance of rigor.”
This isn’t the purpose of the phrase “semblance of rigor.” This sentence already tells us that direct proof was impossible to attain. The purpose of “semblance of rigor” isn’t to communicate the same idea that has already been communicated earlier in this sentence.
The purpose of using the phrase “semblance of rigor” isn’t to contrast the accuracy of Temple’s secondhand information with his firsthand research. This contrast isn’t something that the author is trying to communicate in this paragraph, so we know that this isn’t the author’s purpose in using this phrase. Instead, the author says “semblance of rigor” to show that things might not be as they appear.
This is the author’s purpose in using the phrase “semblance of rigor.” Remember that “semblance” means the appearance of having some quality, even when that may not be the case. The author’s purpose in this sentence is to say that Temple’s additional findings made his argument seem rigorous. However, this appearance of rigor is superficial, since Temple’s quantitative research was about turkeys, while he was making conclusions about dodos.
We don’t know what the consensus among experts is regarding Temple’s conclusion. We know that the author, Strahm, and Speke question Temple’s conclusion, but we don’t know if this indicates consensus among experts. Additionally, the author doesn’t admire Temple’s precision and creativity. Because the author doesn’t agree with the claim in (E), we know that this isn’t the author’s purpose in using the phrase “semblance of rigor.”
Difficulty
66% of people who answer get this correct
This is a difficult question.
It is somewhat easier than other questions in this passage.
CURVE
Score of students with a 50% chance of getting this right
25%143
156
75%170
Analysis
Purpose in context (of word, phrase, or idea)
Structure
Critique or debate
Phenomenon-hypothesis
Science
Answer Popularity
PopularityAvg. score
a
9%
162
b
9%
161
c
10%
161
d
66%
166
e
6%
160
Question history
You don't have any history with this question.. yet!
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